The American and Oregon flags flap above the two-classroom Adel Middle School in the small south-central Oregon community of Adel, Oregon, April 15, 2004.

Don Ryan

Oregonians could be voting in two years on whether they want to remain a part of the United States. Sponsors of an initiative petition called the Oregon Secession Act submitted the initial paperwork just after Tuesday's election results became known.

Portland writer Chris Trejbal is one of the initiative's sponsors. He says he's thought about secession for a while, but he called Donald Trump's election "the final straw."

So less than 24 hours after Trump's victory, he submitted paperwork to the Oregon Secretary of State's office for an initiative that would appear on the 2018 ballot.

"It's an open question for us. Is there really a place for Oregon in the United States anymore? Can our values fit with everyone else's values? And we wanted to start that conversation," Trejbal said.

There's no clear legal path for a state to secede from the union, but Trejbal's initiative would require the governor and state lawmakers to actively pursue the option. It also floats the possibility that Oregon could create a new nation with other like-minded states such as California and Washington.

Secession has long been discussed in California, and backers there renewed their push this week for an eventual ballot measure. In 2012, some people upset with the re-election of Barack Obama mounted efforts to secede on the White House's citizen petition website. Needless to say, none of those was successful.